A MUST READ – WUWT Housekeeping: ongoing issues, updates, fixes, and polls

NOTE: This will be a top post until Monday, new stories follow below. A couple of Saturdays ago, I posted an “Open Thread” with a question about “What could we do better”? You responded, and I’ve listened. In the meantime, WordPress.com has thrown us all a curve-ball with a new software update that I really don’t like because it has now made running WUWT harder.  So, I have a few caveats that I need you to be aware of, and I want to ask a question of my readers that will help me determine the future of this blog.

1. Personal:

I have some personal issues (including my hearing and health) going on in my life during the past year that have prevented me from spending as much time researching, writing posts, and keeping up with comments on WUWT as I used to. Regulars may have noticed this. This is all slowly getting resolved, but it takes time. For those that read about my new hearing aids and the great boost they gave me over a year ago, that benefit has faded, and I’m fighting a pattern recognition problem that I didn’t have as badly before. I’ll expound on the whys of this in a future post.

2. Image fetching for reference pages got broken by an update I had no control over:

Some readers may or may not know that I am hosted at wordpress.com using their highly resilient and automatically backed up cloud based infrastructure. Steve McIntyre’s Climate Audit and Judith Curry’s website also take advantage of this platform and it has worked very well. WUWT has been on it since October of 2007. During this time there have been dozens of updates to the software automatically deployed by WordPress that have been mostly positive, until now.  A few weeks ago, they deployed a new update that forced https: on all sites hosted at wordpress.com . In theory, this is a good thing, in practice, it broke just about every reference page (especially the sea ice page) at WUWT because the update causes all images fetched with http rather than https protocol to become cached. This made the images in the reference appear as if they didn’t update. The only solution is to click directly on them. Some might ask, why don’t I simply change all the http image fetch requests to https? That seems like an easy and obvious fix, except when you discover that a number of the government websites used in our reference pages don’t support https, and the images won’t display when called by that fetching protocol. Here is an example: https://polar.ncep.noaa.gov/seaice/analysis/global.gif

I placed a trouble ticket into wordpress.com support for this issue and here is what they say:

Hi Anthony,

I’ve received a reply from our software department and here’s the conclusion:

We won’t disable the https on your site because it’s a bad practice and may introduce security holes. However, we can stop caching the images on your site, but then your visitors will get the warning about mixed content because as I explained earlier, some of your images are from http (unsecured) sites and your site is https (secured). Let me know if you are okay with this.

Cheers,

Rasto L. – Happiness Engineer

WordPress.com | http://support.wordpress.com

I have told them to turn off caching images, and that I’d fix the pages that had mixed http/https and I’m waiting for confirmation. It’s been three days, and I’ve received no notice, but they may have made the switch already. I’d greatly appreciate it if readers would check out our multitude of reference pages shown below and report back in comments.

3. Sea ice images got broken by a satellite failure:

At about the same time wordpress initiated their https switchover that caused our images in reference pages to stop updating in your browser, the DMSP F17 satellite had a sensor failure that caused the loss of sea-ice data for several organizations, including NSIDC, Cryosphere Today, and others. WUWT has had several posts on the issue, yet some people still write to me wondering why images aren’t correct. The most comical aberration presented by this satellite instrument failure comes from Cryosphere Today:

cryospehere-today-seaice.anomaly.arctic

A more perfect example of a climate “hockey stick” could not possibly be generated, and it is just as bogus a presentation as the original:

Hockey_stick_chart_ipcc_large[1]

NSIDC reports that they are updating their images based on DMSP F18 data, and that it is provisional pending calibration. Other sea-ice agencies have not been so quick to respond.

Patience while the problem gets resolved will be appreciated.

4. Our comment system got broken by the same wordpress update I had no control over:

As mentioned in point 2, in April wordpress.com threw out a major update on https, and this same update also changed the way comments get moderated.

It used to be that comments that were flagged by our banned word list (expletives, hot button words, etc.) would simply be held for moderation. The person who wrote the comment could still see the comment, and that it hadn’t been approved yet, but now with this new update, those flagged comments that need the attention of a moderator to determine if it violates WUWT site policy simply get sent to the trashbin, and disappear from the view of the commenter. This might give the impression to some whose comments disappear that we are engaging in wholesale censorship, we aren’t. But again, this change was out of my control when it was implemented by wordpress.com. I sent in a trouble ticket and this was the response from the Akismet service that handles spam filtering and the moderation system for wordpress.com:

Hi Anthony,

Unfortunately, there’s no way to change what happens to comments that match the blacklist. However, have you considered using the Comment Moderation list instead? It’s on the same settings screen as the blacklist, and comments that match the Moderation list will be left in Pending Approval status instead of being approved or moved to the spam or trash. Then, you wouldn’t need to monitor the spam or trash, and you could just focus on the moderation queue.

Chris F.

Akismet

I’m in the process of working on this today and tomorrow, so hopefully the issue will be resolved. That said, there’s another much bigger problem, see point #5 below.

5. Some commenters have simply gotten out of control.

WUWT is the most viewed and most commented on website in the world related to climate. As of this writing, there are 273,124,092 views and 1,782,475 comments. Obviously, there’s no way I could read all of those comments, there simply isn’t enough time in my life. Early on in WUWT history I did read each and every comment, now it’s an impossibility. WUWT used to be entirely moderated, and every comment required approval, but the task was tedious and mostly thankless, and we lost some very good people who volunteered to help me manage this crushing load by attrition and by death.

Due to WUWT being a high traffic blog and in the top 10 of wordpress.com blogs worldwide on a daily basis, it is a prime target for spammers. This adds to the load, but the recent change by wordpress.com mentioned in item 4 may actually help solve this issue while creating a new one.

In August 2014, I announced a change to WUWT that I thought would improve it on several fronts. Format was a big change, the way comments were dealt with was another. I wrote then:

Also, some comments may be held for moderation, as we’ve recently added some words to that filter. Some people who have been known to post wildly off-topic, long rants, hateful, or otherwise inappropriate comments will get the inspection of a moderator. Also, first time commenters will be held in moderation, and after the first comment is approved, you are whitelisted.

The vast majority of regular commenters are also whitelisted, but occasionally somebody may trigger moderation. One of the surest ways for your comment to be held is to put a whole bunch of links in it, which mimic commercial spam. Right now we have it set to 4 links as the maximum. If you have a comment that requires more than that, try to break it up into two comments, or just accept that your comment will be held for moderation.

In retrospect, the whitelisting thing was a bad idea, because it allowed some unscrupulous types, as well as people with no sense of decorum or decency, to post a single innocuous comment, which gets approved by a moderator and putting them on the whitelist, to then post comments where they aren’t flagged for moderation at all. As a result, the quality of commentary has eroded, and I’ve had to ban several people who only come here to spew invective, hate, and rants.

Because WUWT often gets linked on Drudge, Instapundit, and other political traffic drivers (because after all climate has become mostly political now) we’ve had an influx of people (from both sides) that don’t understand anything about the issues, but simply regurgitate talking points. This gets tedious, fast.

Some are here for nefarious purposes. We’ve had a couple of people who have taken sockpuppeting beyond what even Doug Cotton does  which caused Dr. Roy Spencer to stop accepting comments on his website. No this is even worse; we have two people assuming the persona of another poster. We have clearly identified who these people are (because in your zeal to denigrate, you made mistakes), and we’ve been documenting your behavior for months. if you are reading this (and you know who you are), let this be notice that you’ll be seeing some legal paperwork appear soon, because frankly I’m tired of both of you and your illegal actions, and the people you have impersonated using their full names are furious. I don’t blame them. You deserve some payback and you are going to get it.

It just goes to show how pathetic some people are when it comes to a disagreement of opinion. The AGW proponents use illegal and nefarious tactics like this rather than open and honest debate. Then, they wonder why they are viewed with contempt.

After Dr. Spencer stopped accepting comments, I considered the idea as well. If I didn’t have to deal with comments, I could accomplish a lot more. OTOH, many of the comments are quite useful. I wanted to see what readers thought, so I ran a poll with his commentary:

Indeed, and the amount of energy expended by me and others is great. We walk a very fine line here, trying to balance giving a legitimate forum to open and honest people, while ferreting out and limiting people who simply want to disrupt the conversation via sockpuppetry. It is a lot of work. If I didn’t have volunteer moderators for WUWT, I probably would have gone the way of Spencer long ago. Since we routinely process a thousand or more comments a day here, many of which are from sockpuppeters and posers (you know who you are with special attention to K-man) It would certainly give me more time to research and write articles. It’s certainly less effort.

Here are the results:

suspend-comments-poll

 

There are a few ways that I’m going to deal with this on the short-term. First, you are going to start seeing notices like this image below appear on threads. It is going to be a fair warning to those that aren’t following site policy.

housekeeping-place-clean-sign

We have serial offenders on both sides, they’ll get equal treatment. If the thread gets unruly after that, I’ll simply close it. I have better things to do than moderate idiotic food fights.

Second, for the long-term, in the not too distant future, I’m going to implement changes to the way comments are moderated. To that end, I ask readers the following questions:

  • In the first option, requiring registration will mean that your real name and email will have to be verified. It is a lot of work up-front, but it weeds out sockpuppets and posers for good. Successful blogs like “Little Green Footballs” use this technique. The downside is that it limits open debate on the spur of the moment and tends toward a closed community.
  • The second option, requiring that all comments be held for moderation is what WUWT used to do from 2006 to 2014, but it is a huge amount of work. I’ll need more volunteer moderators to pull this off.
  • The third option, running a detailed filter, would send known disruptors, sockpuppets, and comments with expletives, banned words (like chemtrails, bigfoot, etc) directly to the trash were they won’t be recovered. Steve McIntyre does a version of this on Climate Audit, though he gets a small fraction of the comments we get. He never bothers to recover those comments, but instead concentrates his limited time on content.
  • The fourth option, turning off comments altogether solves the time and effort problem completely, prevents disruption, and allows focus on content exclusively. The downside is that the free exchange of ideas, some of which are very useful, dies with it.

6. What do you think? I can make articles on WUWT “peer-reviewed” before publication.

For technical articles, I have a way where I can invite peer review from both sides of the debate before an article gets published. Links to the unpublished article would be sent to people who have offered to be reviewers (possibly due to a solicitation announcement first) and the article can be checked for accuracy, depth, and citations prior to publication. As we all know, Internet peer review is some of the harshest form of review, but often the best, because it doesn’t invite “pal review” like we’ve seen in climate science circles.

This would be a first, not just for WUWT, but for any climate or science blog as far as I know.

7. WUWT’s ten-year anniversary is coming up

 

I have been doing this non-stop since November 2006, I’d like to take a real vacation to recharge. Even when I have traveled, I keep up the blog. I need a break, but I’m not prepared to go on a one year sabbatical to fix “burn out” like Dave Roberts did.

I’ll need help in the form of guest posters, moderators, etc, and maybe even a little financial help to get me on my way. Willis and I have been talking about a trip to Russia to investigate the cause of the great Red Spot in the surface temperature record.He could blog while we are on the trip like he does when he travels . Thoughts welcome.

8. Hosting – wordpress.com is quickly becoming restrictive

I have danced around this question for years, but the recent changes at wordpress.com that have caused problems cause me to take a good hard look again. I may want to go to a subscription/donor model to make this happen, since getting the features I want for the kind of traffic this blog produces would be several hundred dollars a month. That would mean I’d have the freedom from code restrictions that wordpress.com imposes (they only allow certain features), and could offer features readers have been asking for years, such as comment editing, better threading/numbered threading. Interactive graphs, made with JavaScript etc and much more. It will allow growth, but it will also require more of my time to manage it.

To that end, I thought I’d ask this question:

 

9. Thank you

I realize many of you have become as frustrated as I have with the state of things in the climate debate, and I hope that WUWT can continue to contribute to it in a meaningful way. I owe a debt of gratitude to readers, moderators, and guest essayists. You have my sincerest thanks. Comments about all of these changes and proposed changes are welcome. – Anthony

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nobodysknowledge
May 22, 2016 3:25 am

I agree. And I think what is the worst that can happen with a blog like this, is that it turns into an echo-chamber. So one should not allow abuse of persons who diagree and have other opinions. It is one of the strengths of Anthony that he is open for arguments.

nobodysknowledge
Reply to  nobodysknowledge
May 22, 2016 3:26 am

It was an answer to Mike Jonas.

nobodysknowledge
Reply to  nobodysknowledge
May 22, 2016 3:57 am

I find such comments disgusting:
“You seem to be the first one to comment in this particular interesting and very well thought and described post.
I do not see what connection to it your arguments provided here through your comments here have with the above post.
Seems like the only purpose of you been so eager to comment have only to do with hijacking or trolling the thread.”
[To whom are you speaking? .mod]

nobodysknowledge
Reply to  nobodysknowledge
May 22, 2016 10:01 am

I am speaking to those who like to bully Mosher.

nobodysknowledge
Reply to  nobodysknowledge
May 22, 2016 10:49 am

When you are meeting watchdogs, who bark tr..ll-words, it is not nice at all. They try to shut down discussions.

Reply to  nobodysknowledge
May 22, 2016 10:59 am

I’ve met Steven Mosher. He’s really a nice guy, so when I reply to him I am always polite, even though we usually disagree. Most other commenters are polite, too.
Commenters I could do without are those who just keep repeating the talking points they get from alarmist blogs. They don’t think, they just parrot what think they’re supposed to. (We can tell when they’re cutting and pasrting the talking points they get from other blogs.)
It’s interesting that commenters who just repeat what they’ve been told in the media and by certain other blogs don’t ever seem to make any headway here. I can’t think of a single former skeptic who now buys into the climate scare. On the other hand, lots of readers have posted that this site has changed their minds, and they no longer accept the climate alarmists’ case.
The public is turning against the “carbon” scare. This site is a big reason, because of the facts and arguments presented by both sides. Readers can decide which arguments are reasonable, and which ones make no sense.
But the job isn’t done. We need to get science back to where it belongs: an unbiased bastion of truth. It will take a long time to undo the damage inflicted by people like Michael Mann and the rest of the Climategate reprobates. But it has to be done, or we’re in Lysenko territory.

whiten
May 22, 2016 4:40 am

Perhaps is time for a subscribing scheme implementation, but I think that such a scheme must not effect the most basic and principal mechanisms already in place that seem to work ok despite of the luck of offering no much or enough revenue for upkeep…….
I think subscribing may work if it is orientated around new features not exploited yet at WUWT, like for example the “like” button and an “alert” button, only available and accessible only through subscription.
There also may be many other features there not exploited yet which will offer a more interactive platform to subscribers and also offering more feedback and help with the information about the particular needs and the technical upkeep of the site…..
Categorizing of subscribers through the scheme in accord with the “privileges” offered, like as per a minimum of only been identified as a subscriber in the comments section to the maximum when the subscriber can be able to post also, could increase the attraction and the flavor of interaction.
Considering the special stand and the reputation of this site I think it is feasible to consider and expect that many who participate and interact here may not have a problem in subscribing for a minimal fee and get to be identified in the comment section as subscribers, and others may like to pay a little more for the “privilege” of offering more info and feedback through comment section by being able to access and use a “like” and perhaps a “alert” button, and some others may afford and like to pay for other extra privileges, like the right to post, and get a feel from the “firing” line…:)
Any way just an Idea, maybe not workable or effective in any practical way…….But as I have being participating and interacting for some time now here, and also appreciating a lot the WUWT for what it is and represents including the personal work and struggle of Anthony to keep it as pristine and original as possible, I hope and wish that a way to make WUWT more flexible, resilient and stronger will be found and implemented.
cheers

May 22, 2016 5:22 am

I have been around for almost all of your ten years. I helped some with your site surveys in Kansas. I try to check in first thing every day. Here are my opinions in order of importance: 1. Take a vacation, and don’t take the guy that blogs with you. In fact don’t take a computer at all. ( take a satilite phone ) camp in some remote geologically interesting area for two weeks… study something that doesn’t change… then pick up the blogger and go to Russia. 2. $10 per year is just right. I can’t afford more… Register and qualify commenters. Have a Life membership and individual access codes. 3. When you get back, take 3 days and go to the Mayo Clinic in Minn. and have a whole body physical checkup. 4. If it were mine to do, I would only post once a day… more technical, less “look at what those fools are up to”.

Reply to  DocWat
May 22, 2016 5:34 am

… Like the “sea Ice”… you boys are not just beating a dead horse you are pounding it to mush. I’ll bet one paragraph per month could cover essential information.

Bill Marsh
Editor
May 22, 2016 5:28 am

Anthony,
I have read and enjoyed the posts on this blog for years. Thank you for all the selfless work you’ve done over those years. I have voluntarily contributed to you and this site, but not often enough, I will correct that immediately.
I would like to use my real name on these comments, I suppose I’ll have to create a new WordPress account since the current one was created using an ISP email address that is no longer active (because I had the temerity to retire and move to a location that doesn’t have that particular ISP present).
1) By all means take a break, everybody needs one occasionally. I’d agree with the posters that suggest a longer break than 1 month.
2) Take care of your health. If that entails a less active ‘Anthony’ then so be it. I’d rather have you less frequently than to come here one day and see the site shutdown.
3) I think I would be in favor of the registration option for commenters. I think would help on a couple of fronts:
a) it would make it much harder on the ‘impersonators’ and I fear that that tactic is going to grow over time. I’ve seen it starting to be used even on silly sports sites that I frequent by people who, for various unfathomable reasons, feel they have to ruin another persons reputation. I suspect that the more ‘dedicated’ pro-AGW types (the ones that make the long journey to ‘it is morally acceptable to do immoral, illegal things in order to achieve a greater good’).
b) I think it would make commenters more circumspect in their comments.
c) Would discourage the use of multiple personnas to create an echo chamber of ‘approval’ in the comments. I’ve seen this done on other sites in which a comment is posted and virtually every comment after it registers approval, giving the impression that the vast majority of readers agree/laud the original comment. Won’t stop it entirely, but makes it a lot more time consuming.
d) Probably would help prevent the use of ‘robot’ comments.

jim2
May 22, 2016 5:48 am

OK, about half the voters said they would pay, the other half not.
How about this. $25 per year to read only. $50 per year to read AND comment.

Sandy In Limousin
Reply to  jim2
May 22, 2016 6:13 am

I’m on a low and limited income, and currently don’t/can’t pay for any web content. This would have to continue.

Reply to  jim2
May 22, 2016 4:49 pm

I have to disagree. As someone said up-thread, some people simply can’t afford it, but that does not make their comments less valuable. I would hate to see people blocked from commenting because they don’t have the funds.
A better way is to let those who wish to subscribe, subscribe. They will feel good for doing so, helping not just WUWT but all who visit here, and let those who can’t afford it not miss out. Perhaps a badge of honor for those who subscribe would tell the world they do so: “Joe Bloggs: Subscriber” type of thing.

jim2
May 22, 2016 5:49 am

With 2000 readers that would be 50,000 per year, read only.

JohnWho
May 22, 2016 6:08 am

Registering (real names known to WUWT) free keeps the forum open to the widest audience while allowing some control over spammers and malicious-minded folks and still allows “screen names”. To me, this would be the most desirable situation. Registration to post on a site is so commonplace now that it should not be a problem for anyone.
The “founders/patrons” concept allows for a certain group of people to provide the funding for the site, relieving Anthony of the financial burden. The site could still have a “contribute” or “tip jar” as well just as WUWT has now.

Tom in Florida
Reply to  JohnWho
May 22, 2016 7:35 am

After additional thought, I like the patrons idea better than registration fee. This would allow those who are better off financially to keep the site available for those who are not. Yes it has the sound of socialism but it is voluntary not mandated by the government, so if it bothers you don’t participate. The only caveat would be for patrons not to hold any power or receive preferential treatment. Patrons should do so for the benefit of keeping the site up and running and helping our Host. Perhaps you could also sell banner ads for those who have businesses that would benefit from exposure here.

Eamon Butler
May 22, 2016 6:18 am

Hi Anthony,
Above all else I wish you good health. Many thanks for all the hard work, evident in this site. Thanks also to those who comment on the various posts. It’s always good to get different views on a subject and a difference of opinion shouldn’t have to become a personal war of egos. We should always be open to learning from others. Sometimes we can learn where they are going wrong. Putting them right should be civil and courteous. Respect is a two way thing. However, when someone is obviously trying to hijack the thread and run off topic, I think they deserve to have commenting rights stopped or restricted to moderation. It’s a real pain to trudge through a petty squabble that invariably wastes everyone’s time.
Best to all for the future,
Eamon.

emsnews
May 22, 2016 6:25 am

Antiwar.com used to be popular until the host got pissed at everyone and banned nearly everyone so the comments there are about 10 per article or less which is utterly boring. Much of the information I find useful here at this site are in the comments section, not the articles. Period.

Reply to  emsnews
May 22, 2016 6:31 am

emsnews May 22, 2016 at 6:25 am

Much of the information I find useful here at this site are in the comments section, not the articles. Period.

B I N G O !

u.k(us)
May 22, 2016 6:43 am

WWI taught the military many lessons, one of them was that you needed to rotate the troops off the front line or the constant shelling caused severe psychological problems.
In other words, take that vacation/adventure you spoke of.

Juan Slayton
May 22, 2016 6:50 am

I have considered tossing something in the tip jar from time to time, but I generally felt it would be more productive to put some gas in the car and go hunt down another weatherstation. Since that project seems to be de facto completed, it is time to reconsider.
I would suggest offering subscriptions on a non-mandatory basis to see what kind of response you get. Make it reasonable and you can sign me up right now.
Reader comments are crucial. I still check Spencer’s site from time to time, but I find I do it less often without the comments. On Climate Audit, the discussion (by competent commenters) is probably the best clue that I, as a layman, have, to judge the plausibilty of the major posts.

michel
May 22, 2016 6:51 am

The way Ars Technica does it is worth considering. They mark every subscribing poster with things like:
Wise, Aged Ars Veteran
Ars Scholae Palatinae
Ars Praetorian
and for any of these, you may be ‘et subscriptor’, as in
Ars Praetorian et subscriptor…. eg
FatesriderArs Scholae Palatinae et Subscriptor
But they make it voluntary, and the Wise Aged Ars Veteran I copied the first one from was not a subscriptor…
Ars also allows you to look up previous posts, as does the Guardian, which is not a bad idea as it tells you whether its a real person or an astroturfer.

michel
Reply to  michel
May 22, 2016 7:08 am

I meant ‘registered poster’. You read just by dropping by. You want to post, you register. Then you get these various monikers after your login name…. And for every moniker, you may be ‘et subscriptor’, in red. Not a very high proportion of subscribers, but quite a few numerically.

John B
May 22, 2016 6:54 am

Two tier system.
Only those who pay a subscription can comment. Subscribers would have had their details/bona fide verified.
Non-subscribers can view but not comment.

simple-touriste
Reply to  John B
May 22, 2016 2:28 pm

“Subscribers would have had their details/bona fide verified”
Please describe how this would be done.
You can’t. It doesn’t work, it never worked.

Gabro
Reply to  simple-touriste
May 22, 2016 5:09 pm

IMO that wouldn’t be hard.
Just link to their CVs. If they don’t have CVs, then link to whatever associations or publications they have on line. If need be, mail photocopies of diplomas, whatever, to Anthony.
Might not be perfect, but most people with even a BS in a scientific subject could produce proof.

Reply to  John B
May 22, 2016 5:03 pm

Again, it would penalize those who cannot afford it. The comments are valuable to me. The readers and commenters here are intelligent individuals. I want to know what they think – I don’t want to know only what the WEALTHIER section think and have the rest screened out.

michel
May 22, 2016 6:57 am

Here’s a few more:
Ars Tribunus Angusticlavius
Ars Centurion
Ars Tribunus Militum
Smack-Fu Master, in training
Smack-Fu Master, in training et Subscriptor [subscriptor is in red]
Ars Praefectus
Seniorius Lurkius
No idea what, if anything, they mean, other than subscriptor. Useful though to have some indication of longevity as a member if that is what some of the designations refer to. Sure you could make a useful series that would fit WUWT.
michel

Bloke down the pub
May 22, 2016 7:04 am

Anthony, it’s your bat and your ball, you do what you see fit. We’re all just along for the ride, and what a ride it’s been.

Carla
May 22, 2016 7:10 am

“”2. Image fetching for reference pages got broken by an update I had no control over:
..This made the images in the reference appear as if they didn’t update. The only solution is to click directly on them. Some might ask, why don’t I simply change all the http image fetch requests to https? That seems like an easy and obvious fix, except when you discover that a number of the government websites used in our reference pages don’t support https, and the images won’t display when called by that fetching protocol. ..””
Personally, I think that the Gov’t sites should be switching over to https. Maybe this is already in the works??
Just over on the Solar ref. page and wow, lots of April dates. Seems to be some redundancy or overkill on some of the reference pages. Lot’s of space used, if you know where I am coming from. Links are handy tools.
Take the vacation Anthony, but stay off of Egyptian and Russian airlines. Seems some safety and maintenance issues, so I have heard. (friends in high places that are allowed to skate regulatory.)
Subscriptions eeek .. ok well this is one of the best sites around for timely information.
Upfront fee with a smaller monthly subscription rate, is where my vote would be.
My boss recently retired himself and the business, so I am unemployed at the moment. (hint)
Some FedEx courier jobs open in Petaluma, but the commute is to far for me. L o l
Even so, wouldn’t be able to afford much.
Need to learn more about that red spot you have been referring to. Learned some interesting stuff about the variability of Earth’s magnetic field, from the Van Allen Belt Probes and Barrel experiments, during the reconnection process. These were Immediate variabilities.

Eyal Porat
May 22, 2016 7:22 am

Anthony, as a long time reader (I think from 2007!) I frequently refer others to WUWT as THE place to get the truth about the climate debate.
So thank YOU for what you do!
As for your question about topic #5 – Require all commenters to register first:
Require full verifiable identity info from user – visible only to the blog’s managers.
This can keep peoples identities hidden if they see fit (as we know, many can get in trouble for being “climate deniers”…) but on the other hand keep a full control on spammers etc.
Eyal

Crispin in Waterloo
May 22, 2016 7:30 am

I have been willing to spend a couple of bucks for a ‘vanity plate’ name on a social medium, and an Office365 space, so why not a cup of coffee for my friends on the number one science site?
Looking forward, WUWT can in the long run turn into an on-line training centre with credited courses, degrees, research centres and many emerging electronic products. I know it is hard to think big and far, because the immediate dominates our lives. However let it be known that structured self-study is the future of lifelong education. The grit and balls of WUWT is by far a better example of how to elevate the understanding of the masses than the tacky corners of the net where the disreputable collection of self-appointed climate mullahs preach from their staircases to nowhere. Education is escaping the clutches of ‘those who have names to be wise’.
The subscription model is OK, but an online university is a better goal. It is not about survival of a chirping renegade, it is about fixing the entire mess that post secondary education has become.
This more ambitious approach also generates income and the regular fare can be free. It will also attract many highly skilled contributors who will run their own courses. This model already has millions of on line students around the world.
This is a science site that practices according to the rules of the scientific method, such as there is one, and moderation in the correct sense of the word.

Carla
May 22, 2016 7:43 am

One other thought at the moment…
I think that WordPress owes Anthony a, “Multitude of Gratitude.”
WUWT has probably done more to help increase their business and traffic over the years than any of the others.

ldd
Reply to  Carla
May 22, 2016 10:36 am

Hear, hear.

Mike Sexton
May 22, 2016 7:55 am

I want to thank Anthony for this site and all the guest posters for the great stuff
I first came to the attention of the site with the photos of the temp stations and thought how can they claim warming with all that bad data
I’m just the average joe working stiff who has never bought the warming story I remember seeing the In Search Of episode about a possible new ice age so it was highly suspect to me that it could go to the other extreme so fast
I have always thought that it was just a money grab
I visit this site many times a day looking for new stories and the great posts in the comments This is just my second post so I am more of a reader I also point this site out to others who are on the fence or on the cagw side
So I hope things keep going and again thank you

Monroe Hunsicker
May 22, 2016 7:57 am

Charge me, I’ll gladly pay.

Editor
May 22, 2016 8:20 am

Anthony, one suggestion; have a “like” and “dislike” buttons, which would allow busy people to provide feedback, quickly. Also, since i am now retired I will gladly act a moderator. The only potential problem with this is that when I am in the UK we are 8 hours ahead of Pacific Time and when in Spain 9 hours ahead of Pacific Time.

John Whitman
May 22, 2016 8:56 am

Here are my responses:
1) Anthony takes a one year vacation. Arrange to put a dynamic duo of ristvan and Bob Tisdale in charge while you are recharging yourself. Those two have my total respect and support!!!
2) very formal commenter registration is a long long long time overdue
3) 100% moderation of all comments is needed coupled with severely limiting the number of posts each day to 2 posts. If there is urgent and extremely important breaking news only then exceed the 2 posts/day limit.
4) no mandatory subscription but have routine monthly fund drive posts to promote volunteer funding . . . . monthly fund-a-thons
5) the past WUWT commenting process is the best PEER REVIEW process. So, please, no other prepublication ‘pre’-peer review.
6) stay with word press
7) have a small group (not more than 4 or 5) of your supporters provide continuous strategy consultation on the strategy of what kinds of posts are most effective and how to stay ahead of the climate situation/development curve.
John

Michael May
May 22, 2016 8:58 am

With respect to the http:// and https:// problem….deleting the ‘s’ isn’t too much for anyone to sort out.
Enact a plan and take a (long) break. Illness has wiped out my past year and a half. Hopefully sorted….I move on!

Barry Sheridan
May 22, 2016 9:05 am

Anthony, thanks for providing us with such an interesting and informative source of information about this vital issue. I understand the quandary you face, but if you are to limit access some of the good influence you have will go with it. Personally I am happy to contribute five dollars a month on a voluntary basis, will sort this ouit this week, though doubt I have the expertise to enable me to moderate. If you need a break then you must take one, there is not point in running yourself into the ground and getting ill over it. This site is too important to be lost.

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